Community Alliance for Teen Safety
Safe Homes & Communities
July 2010

41 Birch Street / Derry, NH 03038 / 603.434.5251 / info@catsnh.org / www.catsnh.org

In This Issue
Training & Development
TV/Media Camp
Synthetic Marijuana
Healthy Eating
Rx Abuse
Safe Homes Network





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Learn more about...


NH Farm to School Program

NH Farm to School (NHFTS) is a statewide program working to connect NH farms and schools. Farm to school connections enable schools to serve healthy, locally grown foods in their cafeterias, integrate farms, food, and nutrition into their curriculum, and explore food and agriculture-based learning opportunities.  Learn more...
 



Training

Initial Training on Addiction
August 11, or November 17, 8:30 - 4:00 p.m., Concord, NH

This introductory training on addiction is designed to raise awareness and understanding of the dynamics and impact of addiction. It will cover the neurological basis of addiction; mental, behavioral, emotional and spiritual dimensions; stages of change; recovery; motivational techniques and resources.


Staff

Sue Centner,
Director

Paula Galvin,
Assistant Director

Kaitlyn Clarke,
Youth Coordinator
Community Alliance for Teen Safety is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization. Our mission is to promote safe habits for all youth by increasing awareness of high-risk behaviors, encouraging healthy choices, and fostering community alliances in Chester, Derry, Hampstead, Londonderry, Salem and Windham.



Dear Friend of the CATS Community,
 
Sue Centner

We hope everyone is having a safe and enjoyable summer. Kaitlyn, our youth coordinator, and I will be attending an annual conference at the end of this month in Phoenix, AZ.  CADCA'a annual Mid-Year Training Institute offers in-depth training sessions  for community coalition leaders and staff. I look forward to sharing what we learn in the coming months. 

CATS is pleased to offer a free training opportunity for youth during the first week of August. TV/Media Camp is scheduled at Derry Community Television in the Municipal Center on Manning Street. Please read the announcement below for details.

Looking for a perfect gift?  Shop the new CATS Online Store.  Your purchases of t-shirts, totes, mugs, and more will support CATS programs and activities.  Click on the pink t-shirt in the left column or visit the CATS homepage.

As always, please contact CATS with any questions, comments or suggestions. We invite your involvement! 
 
Best regards.

Contact Us
 

Youth TV/Media Camp

Learn how to create and produce a television show at Derry Channel 17 Studio.

Two Free Camp Options
  • Basic 2-Day Camp: August 2nd & 3rd
  • Advanced 4-Day Camp: August 2nd - 5th
  • TV production day for both camps is August 6th.
 Free / Preregistration is Required

Please complete the online registration form below.Participating youth will be introduced to the skills required to create and produce a television show on Derry Channel 17. Participants will be immersed in the world of a working television station: they will get hands-on experience using modern broadcast equipment with trained professionals. Kids will plan, write, direct, shoot and edit short TV shows and video blogs of their own choosing.

The camp will be composed of mini-workshops in camera operation, set-design, lighting, audio/sound engineering, digital editing, character generation, control room management, producing, directing and TV hosting. At the end of the week, participants will tape a television show hosted, staffed and produced by the kids themselves! Instructor descriptions below registration form.

Session Hours: 9:30 AM to 11:30 AM; Lunch; 12:30 PM to 2:30 PM (Lunch is provided by CATS.) Click for details.


Synthetic Marijuana Use Increasing

reprinted from EagleTribune.com, North Andover, MA, June 13, 2010, Synthetic marijuana becoming popular, by Jarret Bencks


K2 - or Spice - looks, smells and gives a high like marijuana. But it's not pot.


The compound of various herbs sold legally as an incense contains an artificial form of THC, a substance in marijuana, that is sprayed on.
K2 and Spice are the two most prominent brand names for synthetic marijuana. They can be purchased online for about $30 for a 3-gram packet. Both are also reportedly sold in convenience stores and smokeshops in other parts of the country.

Some states have banned the mix of herbs, but it hasn't appeared in the Merrimack Valley and Southern New Hampshire yet. "We have heard of it, but we have not yet seen it in our jurisdiction," said Stephen O'Connell, spokesman for the Essex County District Attorney's Office.

A survey of the many convenience stores and smokeshops along the state border on Route 28 found no stores in the area sell it. Police in Salem, N.H, haven't seen the synthetic marijuana yet, but they have concerns, police Capt. Shawn Patten said.

"Kids could get their hands on it, but because it's legal, we're limited with what we can do with it," Patten said. "Fortunately, we haven't seen a lot of it around here. We hope it stays that way."

The National Drug Intelligence Center of the U.S. Department of Justice issued a memo on the substance to various branches of law enforcement around the country last month after it began to gain popularity in high schools and on college campuses. The memo outlined the potential dangers of the "cannabinoid synthetic."

"They have many adverse effects, including panic attacks, agitation, tachycardia, elevated blood pressure, anxiety, pallor, numbness and tingling, vomiting, hallucinations (which can be intense), and, in some cases, tremors and seizures," the memo states.

Mostly, the synthetic marijuana is manufactured overseas, but some is made in the United States, the memo states. It gives a high for 30 minutes to two hours before wearing off, the memo said.

The drug is a mix of various plants and herbs, but there is a lot that isn't yet known about it, according to Special Agent Tony Pettigrew of the New England branch of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.
"What it is sprayed with could already be a controlled substance," Pettigrew said. "If they (parents) see something like this lying around, they should know it's not necessarily harmless."

The label on packets of K2 warns it is "not for human consumption," and states it is a "novelty herbal incense which includes natural and synthetic ingredients."

Pettigrew said cracking down on synthetic marijuana is a low priority for the DEA in New England.

"It's a drug of concern, we are aware of it, but we aren't out making deals," he said.

Google search K2 synthetic marijuana



Healthy Eating



Derry Farmer's Market
July 7th through October 13th
3:00 to 7:00 PM

Pocket Park along Broadway

Local farmers and artisans will be on site with NH grown and handmade items.




NH Farmer's Market Association
National Association of Farmers' Market Nutrition Programs
National WIC Association
USDA Nutrition Assistance Programs

20% of High Schoolers Abuse Prescription Drugs

reprinted from June 03, 2010 (HealthDay News)


One in five high school students in the United States has taken a prescription medication that was not prescribed for them, a new survey shows.

Conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the survey covers a variety of risky behaviors among American youth.
"We are very concerned that 20 percent of high school students are reporting this behavior," said survey author Danice K. Eaton, a research scientist at the CDC. "It can be dangerous to take a prescription drug that hasn't been prescribed to you."

Studies have shown that taking non-prescribed prescription drugs can lead to overdose, addiction and death, Eaton explained. "Taking a prescription drug that hasn't been prescribed to you is a health risk behavior," she said.
In the survey, 16,460 high school students were asked if they had ever taken prescription drugs such as OxyContin, Percocet, Vicodin, Adderall, Ritalin or Xanax, without a doctor's prescription.

The abuse of prescription drugs was widest among whites at 23 percent, followed by Hispanics at 17 percent, and black students at 12 percent.
In addition, the abuse of prescription drugs was most common among 12th graders (26 percent) and lowest among ninth graders (15 percent), the researchers found. But, prescription drug abuse was the same for boys and girls, at 20 percent.

This is the first time a question about prescription drugs has been asked in the survey, Eaton said. The next survey will be in 2011, with the data being released in 2012. This will be the first opportunity to see trends in the abuse of prescription drugs, she noted.

In the meantime, the "awareness that there is such a high prevalence of prescription drug abuse among high school students is the main thing that we can emphasize from our data," Eaton said.

Dr. David Katz, director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine, said there are too many prescription drugs waiting to be abused.

"When prescription drugs are available in a home to the patient for whom they were prescribed, they are also available to the patient's teenager," he said.

Educating teens about the potential harms of prescription drugs, and including discussion of prescription medications in all drug control programs, is warranted, Katz said.

"Parental awareness, which this report helps cultivate, and vigilance will be more important still," he said. "But perhaps the ultimate solution to this problem is a more dedicated societal commitment to disease prevention and health promotion, so that fewer prescription drugs are in circulation, and available for such misuse."

The survey also asked about alcohol and drug abuse. In all, 72 percent of the students said they had used alcohol. Furthermore, 37 percent had used marijuana, 6.4 percent had used cocaine, 4.1 percent had used methamphetamine and 6.7 percent had used ecstasy.

These findings were basically the same as those in the last survey, which was done in 2007, the researchers noted.

On the bright side, high school students seemed to be eating better.

  • The number of students who drank a soda a day dropped, from 34 percent in 2007 to 29 percent in 2009.
  • More students ate fruit or 100 percent fruit juice (30 percent in 2005 and 34 percent in 2009).
  • Fewer students engaged in risky weight-loss diets, such as not eating, taking diet pills or vomiting or taking laxatives.

However, students are still engaging in other risky behaviors such as:
  • 78 percent had not eaten fruits or vegetables five or more times daily in the week before the survey.
  • 82 percent said they had not been physically active for at least an hour per day.
  • 19 percent smoked cigarettes.
  • 28 percent rode in a car driven by a person who had been drinking alcohol.
  • 39 percent of sexually active students had had sex without using a condom.

These numbers are also similar to the 2007 numbers, the researchers noted.

SOURCES: Danice K. Eaton, Ph.D., research scientist, Division of Adolescent and School Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; David L. Katz, M.D., M.P.H., director, Prevention Research Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn.; June 4, 2010, CDC report, Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance - United States, 2009

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Source: National Organizations for Youth Safety



Do You Know About 211?

Changing the Way New Hampshire Finds Help

2-1-1 is an easy to remember telephone number that connects callers, at no cost, to information about critical health and human services available in their community

2-1-1 NH is an initiative led by United Ways of New Hampshire (UWNH), an organization that represents the 10 United Ways across the state, in partnership with the State of New Hampshire, Citizens Bank Foundation, the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, Exeter Hospital, and Public Service of New Hampshire (PSNH).

Residents in New Hampshire can contact 2-1-1 NH toll-free by dialing 2-1-1 in state or 1-866-444-4211 from out of state or visit their website at http://www.211nh.org.

Get Involved with Safe Homes Network


1. Can you spare one to two hours a month to serve as a member of an advisory committee?

2. Have you invited a friend to join Safe Homes Network?

Safe Homes Network is a nationally recognized voluntary peer parent/guardian support network with the goal of enhancing the safety net for youth and reducing the toll of underage drinking and use of drugs. In signing a voluntary pledge, participating parents elect to take an active role in minimizing the influence of alcohol and drugs on youth in their homes and to be available to other parents via a Safe Homes Network directory.

In addition to enhancing youth safety CATS Safe Homes Network is also committed to educating parents about current laws and policy such as the State of New Hampshire's party host liability law, RSA 644:18 Facilitating a Drug or Underage Alcohol House Party. This law holds "hosts" of parties responsible for the actions of underage participants and can result in fines and/or jail time. Safe Homes Network is currently offered to residents of Chester, Derry and Hampstead. Go to www.catsnh.org/safehomesnetwork.html for more information and the pledge!